Mslsl-sayayn-dayayn-alhlqh-8 !full! -
A medical data privacy regulation (System 1) forbids sharing patient records, but during a pandemic, religious‑ethical duty (System 2) may require disclosing anonymized data to save lives.
| Stage | Name (functional translation) | Key Question | |-------|-------------------------------|---------------| | 1 | | Which rules or values appear to clash? | | 2 | Maṣlaḥah mapping (MSLSL‑1) | What are the public interests / harms at stake? | | 3 | Sayyn‑A: Textual / precedent stream | What do established sources (laws, scriptures, precedents) say? | | 4 | Sayyn‑B: Contextual / reality stream | What do current social, economic, or technological facts require? | | 5 | Dayyn‑A: Obligations under System 1 (e.g., legal‑positive) | What does positive law mandate? | | 6 | Dayyn‑B: Obligations under System 2 (e.g., moral‑religious) | What does ethical / religious law require? | | 7 | Harmonization through prioritized maṣlaḥah | Can the two dayyn be reconciled? If not, which maṣlaḥah outweighs? | | 8 | Closure & revisability (return to stage 1) | Adopt provisional ruling, but leave open to re‑evaluation when circumstances change. | mslsl-sayayn-dayayn-alhlqh-8
: The episode features interactions with the Egyptian character Azmi (played by Hassan Hosny ), bridging the comedic styles of Egyptian and Levantine drama. A medical data privacy regulation (System 1) forbids
Each “circle” (ḥalqah) represents a step in a closed‑loop reasoning process. The stages are designed to be applied sequentially, with feedback loops between them. | | 3 | Sayyn‑A: Textual / precedent